Nobel fallout: BRIC split down the middle, IBSA intact; India's neighbours side with China

New Delhi
8 December 2010

The turnout at Friday's Nobel Peace Prize ceremony in Oslo has lessons for
India and China alike. While the award to Liu Xiaobo, the jailed pro-democracy activist,
has exposed the communist-ruled country's soft underbelly, its fallout is instructive for
India.

The majority of China's neighbours that have decided to be absent from the ceremony
are in India's immediate or proximate neighbourhood. Countries such as Sri Lanka,
Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Vietnam and Kazakhstan could have
made the decision for reasons ranging from diplomatic pressure exerted by Beijing, fear
of their own track record on human rights and democratic freedoms, or economic
considerations.

While Pakistan's boycott of the ceremony did not come as a surprise, given its all-
weather friendship with China, Sri Lanka's choice would definitely have caused concern
for India.

The Norwegian Nobel Institute had invited 65 countries with embassies in Oslo out of
which 44 accepted it, 19 countries declined, while Sri Lanka and Algeria did not reply.

IBSA, a group comprising India, Brazil and South Africa, remains intact as all three have
confirmed their participation at the ceremony. The Group of Four (G-4), consisting of
India, Germany, Brazil and Japan, is together, too. In sharp contrast, BRIC is split down
the middle: China and Russia will boycott the ceremony but India and Brazil won't.

Then there is NAM (Non-Aligned Movement): 16 of the 21 countries that have either
declined the invitation or not replied to it are its members. India, Indonesia, Thailand and
South Africa are among the few NAM members that have decided to be a part of the
ceremony.

SAARC did not fare any better. Of its eight members, four -- India, Pakistan, Afghanistan
and Sri Lanka -- have embassies in Oslo and, therefore, were invited. But India is the
lone SAARC member to have accepted it.

Perhaps the only other groups that have done well for themselves are the European
Union (EU) and, to a lesser extent, NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organisation). The US and
its trans-Atlantic European allies are expected to be in full attendance at the ceremony.

Call it the Obama effect but all four Asian countries -- India, Indonesia, South Korea and
Japan -- that the US president swung through in November, will be attending the
ceremony.

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